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Taylor Marsh has been writing on line since 1996, with the archives provided here a representation of that work.

Tag Archives | Iran

Of Iran and Hype

Israel will attack Iran! Yesterday, ABC reported “senior
Pentagon officials” are concerned Israel could strike
.

No, they won’t, said Charles Krauthammer today, they don’t have the equipment.
But we do, wink-wink.

Brit Hume was all over the story today on Fox, putting it all in the context
of an Obama presidency. If it happens before the election Obama will have to
support it, of course, or risk losing. Oh, but Brit reminds everyone, this is
all simply speculation. Ya think?

Seymour
Hersh
has been writing about it for years, including just recently again.

The
State department said nonsense:



And for the second time this week, it fell to the State Department to respond.
Tom H. Casey, deputy spokesman, provided Reuters with the U.S. government’s
reaction to the ABC News report:

I have no information that would substantiate that, and I think it’s
rather foolish of people who often have no clue what they’re talking
about to assert things and not even have the courtesy to do so on the basis
of their name.

Later in the day, he elaborated on the question with a useful observation.
Despite Israeli rehearsals and saber rattling on all sides, the final decision
to attack will come down to a handful of officials who are not exactly open
books on their military plans.

“It’s always amazing that there are lots of anonymous sources
out there who profess to know the inner will of officials in other countries,
Israel or otherwise,” Mr. Casey said.

… .. Having reasoned with reporters, Mr. Casey turned to comedy. “You
know, I need to find this guy, because apparently he’s an expert on
the Israeli military, an expert on Iran and an expert on nuclear issues at
the same time,” he said. “Let’s get him a Nobel Prize.”

ABC News, for its part, offered a follow-up article today that included doubts
that war was on the horizon. Hirsch Goodman, a national security analyst in
Tel Aviv, dismissed the story as “just the latest in the hype that has
been generated in the last few weeks.”

Juan
Cole
on the “senior Pentagon” sources, who no doubt will never
be named:


… This second “red line” is pure bullshit. There is no evidence
that Iran is enriching uranium to weapons grade at all, much less that it
is making enough highly-enriched uranium that it will be able to make a bomb
in 2009.

You can’t use low-enriched uranium to make a bomb.

The IAEA says that there is no evidence–zilch, zero, nada– that Iran has
facilities for enriching to weapons grade or that it is trying to do so.

Instead we get rumors about bomb, bomb, bombing Iran. But in an election year,
no one should get too comfortable.

This
tidbit from Laura Rozen
is also interesting.

Meanwhile, any of these guys talking about Pakistan or Central Asia? Not a
word.

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JOE BIDEN: A New Approach to Pakistan

Expert Guest Post by presidential candidate Senator Joe
Biden

Today, I delivered a major foreign policy address to the New Hampshire Institute of Politics at Saint Anselm College in Manchester. The events of the last week serve as a reminder of what is at stake if we do not take immediate steps to change the way we interact with the world. On Tuesday, I wrote about my broad goals for a new policy towards Pakistan. Today, I want to explain my new approach to Pakistan in greater detail.

I’ve been saying for some time that Pakistan is the most complex country we deal with – and that a crisis was just waiting to happen. On Saturday night, it did.

President Musharraf staged a coup against his own government. He suspended the constitution, imposed de-facto martial law, postponed elections indefinitely, and arrested hundreds of lawyers, journalists, and human rights activists. He took these steps the day after Secretary Rice and the commander of all American
forces in the region appealed to Musharraf not to take them.

America has a huge stake in the outcome of this crisis – and in the path Pakistan follows in the months and years to come. Pakistan has strong democratic traditions and a large, moderate majority. But that moderate majority must have a voice in the system and an outlet with elections. If not, moderates may find that they have no choice but to make common cause with extremists, just as the Shah’s opponents did in Iran three decades ago.

But unlike Iran, Pakistan already has nuclear weapons.

It is hard to imagine a greater nightmare for America than the world’s second-largest Muslim nation becoming a failed state in fundamentalist hands, with an arsenal of nuclear weapons and a population larger than those of Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan and North Korea combined.

To prevent that nightmare from becoming a reality, I believe we need to do three things:

First, deal pro-actively with the current crisis.

Second, and for the longer term, move from a Musharraf policy to a Pakistan policy that gives the moderate majority a chance to succeed.

And third, help create conditions in the region that maximize the chances of success, and minimize the prospects for failure.

Resolving the Crisis

To help defuse the current political crisis, we must be far more pro-active, not reactive and make it clear to Pakistan that actions have consequences. President Bush’s first reaction was to call on President Musharraf to reverse course. Given the stakes, I thought it was important to actually call him – which is exactly what I did. I also spoke to opposition leader Benazir Bhutto. President Musharraf and I had a very direct and detailed discussion. I told him how critical it is that elections go forward as planned in January, that he follow through on his commitment to take off his uniform, and that he restore the rule of law to Pakistan.

It was clear to me that President Musharraf understands the consequences for his country and for relations with the United States if he does not return Pakistan to the path of democracy. Now, President Bush finally got around to calling Musharraf yesterday. As a few of you may know, I’m running for President and I can tell you this: if I’m elected, I won’t wait five days to pick up the phone to delegate matters of this magnitude to my secretary of state or to my ambassador. There is too much at stake to leave this kind of conversation to others.

If President Musharraf does not restore his nation to the democratic path, U.S. military aid will be in great jeopardy. I would look hard at big-ticket weapons systems intended primarily to maintain the balance of power with India, not to combat the Taliban or Al Qaeda: hardware like F-16 jets and P-3 maritime surveillance aircraft. President Musharraf doesn’t want this aid suspension – and neither does the military establishment whose support he needs. Nor can they afford for this crisis to undermine confidence in Pakistan’s economy, which has already taken a hard hit. So I believe there is incentive for cooler heads in Pakistan to prevail. But if they don’t and if President Bush does not act, Congress almost certainly will.

Building a New Relationship

Beyond the current crisis lurks a far deeper problem. The relationship between the U.S. and Pakistan is largely transactional — and this transaction isn’t working for either party. From America’s perspective, we’ve spent billions of dollars on a bet that Pakistan’s government would take the fight to the Taliban and Al Qaeda while putting the country back on the path to democracy. It has done neither.

From Pakistan’s perspective, America is an unreliable ally that will abandon Pakistan the moment it’s convenient to do so, and whose support has done little more than bolster unrepresentative rulers.

It is time for a new approach.

We’ve got to move from a transactional relationship — the exchange of aid for services — to the normal, functional relationship we enjoy with all of our other military allies and friendly nations. We’ve got to move from a policy concentrated on one man – President Musharraf – to a policy centered on an entire people… the people of Pakistan. Like any major policy shift, to gain long-term benefits we’ll have to shoulder short term costs. But given the stakes, those costs are worth it.

Here are the four elements of this new strategy.

First, triple non-security aid, to $1.5 billion annually. For at least a decade. This aid would be unconditioned: it’s our pledge to the Pakistani people. Instead of funding military hardware, it would build schools, clinics, and roads.

Second, condition security aid on performance. We should base our security aid on clear results. We’re now spending well over $1 billion annually, and it’s not clear we’re getting our money’s worth. I’d spend more if we get better returns–and less if we don’t.

Third, help Pakistan enjoy a “democracy dividend.” The first year of democratic rule should bring an additional $1 billion — above the $1.5 billion non-security aid baseline. And I would tie future non-security aid — again, above the guaranteed baseline — to Pakistan’s progress in developing democratic institutions and meeting good-governance norms.

Fourth, engage the Pakistani people, not just their rulers. This will involve everything from improved public diplomacy and educational exchanges to high impact projects that actually change people’s lives.

This plan would fundamentally and positively shift the dynamic between the U.S. and Pakistan. Here’s how:

A drastic increase in non-security aid, guaranteed for a long period, would help persuade Pakistan’s people that America is an all-weather friend – and Pakistan’s leaders that America is a reliable ally. Pakistanis suspect our support is purely tactical. They point to the aid cut-off that followed the fall of the Soviet Union to our refusal to deliver or refund purchased jets in the 1990s and to our blossoming relationship with rival India. Many Pakistanis believe that the moment Osama bin Laden is gone, U.S. interest will go with him.

When U.S. aid makes a real difference in people’s lives, the results are powerful. In October 2005, after a devastating earthquake, American military helicopters delivering relief did far more to improve relations than any amount of arms sales or debt rescheduling. And the Mobile Army Surgery Hospital we left behind is a daily reminder that America cares.

To have a real impact on a nation of 165 million, we’ll have to raise our spending dramatically. A baseline of $1.5 billion annually, for a decade, is a reasonable place to start. That might sound like a lot – but it’s about what we spend every week in Iraq. Conditioning security aid– now about three-quarters of our package–would help push the Pakistani military to finally crush Al Qaeda and the Taliban.

Aid to the Pakistani people should be unconditioned — that is, not subject to the ups and downs of a particular government in Islamabad or Washington. But aid to the Pakistani military and intelligence service should be closely conditioned — that is, carefully calibrated to results. Like it or not, the Pakistani security services will remain vital players – and our best shot at finding Bin Laden and shutting down the Taliban. Their performance has been decidedly mixed: we’ve caught more terrorists in Pakistan than in any other country– but $10 billion later, Pakistan remains the central base of Al Qaeda operations. We must strike a much better bargain.

A “democracy dividend” – additional assistance in the first year after democratic rule is restored — would empower Pakistan’s moderate mainstream. The Bush Administration’s Musharraf First policy was understandable — at first. Musharraf had broad support, and in the wake of 9/11 he seemed committed to
the fight against Al Qaeda. Six years later, the General is diverting his military, his police, and his intelligence assets from the fight against the terrorists to a crackdown on his political opponents.

The Pakistani people have moved on. Hundreds of thousands have taken to the streets to protest Musharraf’s unconstitutional rule– and hundreds have been killed or gravely injured in the process. The Democracy Dividend would help restore the moral currency this administration has squandered with empty rhetoric about democracy. And it would enable the secular, democratic, civilian political leaders to prove that they–more than the generals or the radical Islamists–can bring real improvement to the lives of their constituents.

Last, we’ve got to engage the Pakistani people directly, and address issues important to them, not just to us. On Afghanistan, Iraq, the Palestinians, Kashmir, Pakistanis want a respectful hearing. We owe them that at least that much.

Ask an ordinary Pakistani to list his top concerns about America and you may get answers unrelated to international grand strategy: our visa policy and textile quotas. Or she might raise Abu Ghraib and Gitmo or water-boarding and other forms of torture the Bush Administration still refuses to renounce. Pakistanis don’t
see these as mere “issues.” They see these things as a moral stain on the soul of our nation. In my judgment, so should we.

Creating the Conditions for Success

This new Pakistan policy cannot succeed in isolation. Conditions in the region and in the broader Muslim world – conditions that the United States can affect – will make a huge difference, for good or for bad. We’ve got to connect the dots – to be, as I suggested at the outset, smart as well as strong.

First, there’s what we should do. To increase the prospects that Pakistan will take the lead in the fight against the Taliban and Al Qaeda, we should rededicate ourselves to a forgotten war: Afghanistan. When we shifted resources away from Afghanistan to Iraq, Musharraf concluded the Taliban would rebound, so he cut
a deal with them.

Redoubling our efforts in Afghanistan – not just with more troops but with the right kind and with a reconstruction effort that matches President Bush’s Marshall Plan rhetoric – would embolden Pakistan’s government to take a harder line on the Taliban and Al Qaeda.

Second, there’s what we should not do. Consider all this talk of war with Iran. It is totally counter-productive to achieving our ends in Iran but also in Pakistan. In Iran, it allows President Ahmadinejad to distract the Iranian people from the failures of his leadership and adds a huge security premium to the price
of oil, with the proceeds going from our consumers to Iran’s government. And in Pakistan and also Afghanistan, anything the fuels the sense of an American crusade against Islam puts moderates on the defensive and empowers extremists. It is hard to think of a more self-defeating policy.

History’s Verdict

History may describe today’s Pakistan as a repeat of 1979 Iran or 2001 Afghanistan. Or history may write a very different story: that of Pakistan as a stable, democratic, secular Muslim state. Which future unfolds will be strongly influenced–if not determined– by the actions of the United States.

I believe that Pakistan can be a bridge between the West and the global Islamic community. Most Pakistanis want a lasting friendship with America. They respect and admire our society. But they are mystified over what they see as our failure to live up to our ideals.

The current crisis in Pakistan is also an opportunity to start anew – to build a relationship between Pakistan and the United States upon which both our peoples can depend – and be proud.

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Obama Absent from Webb Iran Letter to Bush

updated below & bumped

Via
Sam Stein
:


Thirty senators sent a letter to the White House on Thursday warning President Bush not to take offensive military action against Iran without the consent of Congress. Noticeably absent from the list of signatories is presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-IL. … ..

…According to its authors, the letter was designed to clarify the ambiguity
of the recent Kyl-Lieberman amendment designating Iran's Revolutionary Guard
as a terrorist organization. Obama has been critical of that amendment as
well as the Bush administration's aggressive rhetoric towards Tehran. Yet
the senator from Illinois turned down a request to sign on to the White House
letter.

“I was surprised and disappointed,” John Isaacs, president of the
Council for a Livable World and one of the catalysts behind the letter, told
the Huffington Post. “I contacted virtually every office and to me it
was a no-brainer that Obama and [Sen.] Biden [whose name was also not on the
list] would both sign on. Neither did.”

The letter, which was spearheaded by Sen. Jim Webb, D-VA, was signed
by presidential candidates Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-NY, who voted for the Kyl-Lieberman
provision, and Sen. Chris Dodd, D-CT, who opposed it.
The text reads:

“We are writing to express serious concerns with the provocative statements
and actions stemming from your administration with respect to possible U.S.
military action in Iran. These comments are counterproductive and undermine
efforts to resolve tensions with Iran through diplomacy.”

Sources knowledgeable with the crafting of the letter said there were two
general arguments offered by those who did not sign on in support: that Congress
already has the power to declare war, and that the letter text was too vague
about defensive and/or covert action against Iran. Notably, Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) also declined to attach his name.

Staff for Obama and Biden did not return requests for comment by the time
of publication. A list of the signatories is below. … ..

New '08 Iran Rift: Obama Refuses To Sign Dem Letter To White House

As vocal as Obama has been against Clinton on her Kyl-Lieberman vote, as well
as other matters relating to Iran, it's troubling he again chose to walk away
from an opportunity to get on the record on Iran.

I've got emails out to the Obama and Biden camps. I'll let you know when they
reply.

UPDATE: While I was at the MSNBC gig, Obama and Biden's camps emailed me their statements. Also breaking on the AP is that Obama will offer his own legislation on Iran, competing with Webb who was going to re-introduce his Iran bill in the next weeks.


OBAMA camp…

“Senator Obama admires Senator Webb and his sincere and tireless efforts on this issue. But it will take more than a letter to prevent this administration from using the language contained within the Kyl-Lieberman resolution to justify military action in Iran. This requires a legislative answer and Senator Obama intends to propose one.” – Bill Burton, Obama spokesperson

BIDEN camp…

“Sen. Biden voted against the amendment urging the designation of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist group. He strongly opposed it because he believed it could be used by this President to justify military action against Iran. He has also made clear many times his view that the President lacks the authority to use force against Iran absent authorization from Congress. He didn't need to clarify that position – he's been clear from the start.” – Elizabeth Alexander, Biden spokesperson

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Clinton’s Iran Gambit


more at C&L



“Well, the Cheney element of the administration is well represented in the United States Senate.” – Senator James Webb

On “Hardball,” James Webb said he was about to try again with
his Iran bill, which now has Clinton as a co-sponsor. It couldn’t come soon
enough for Clinton. With Mr. Bush burning rhetoric on Iran, her Kyl-Lieberman
vote may yet turn into her biggest liability and vulnerability. Bush’s designation
of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards as a WMD proliferator, topped off with his
naming the elite Quds Force as a supporter of terrorism, is the hardest line
we’ve taken on Iran since Carter. The first time we’ve designated a military
force attached to a state as a supporter of terrorism. The Kyl-Lieberman legislation,
coupled with Bush’s latest moves, remind everyone of 2002 and how we got into Iraq, which is a place Clinton doesn’t want to be. Omens
are popping and it’s making people nervous.


“The president does not want to be stuck — and doesn’t want his successor
to be stuck — between two bad choices: living with an Iranian nuclear weapon
or using military force to prevent Iran from building nuclear weapons,”
said Peter D. Feaver, who recently left a staff position on the National Security
Council. “He is looking for a viable third way, negotiations backed up
by carrots and sticks, that could resolve the Iranian nuclear file on his
watch or, failing that, offer a reasonable prospect of doing so on his successor’s
watch.”

Even so, the administration’s actions yesterday immediately rekindled fears
among Democrats and other countries that the administration is on a path toward
war. Bush’s charged rhetoric in recent months, including a warning that Iran
could trigger a “nuclear holocaust,” and his close consultations
with hard-liners — such as former Commentary editor Norman Podhoretz — have
led many outside the White House to conclude that the president will order
airstrikes to eliminate any Iranian nuclear capability.

War with Iran is absolute madness, especially given our vulnerability in Iraq
and the strength of Iran’s nationalist population, not to mention the current state of our armed forces. But I’m not convinced Bush wouldn’t lob a cruise missile
or two if the situation turned sour. It always worries me when tensions are
high, language is careless, and troops and weapons are all poised near the fault
line. That the Senate is willing to offer up careless legislation that props up the president’s favorite pastime doesn’t engender much security.

Of course, Clinton is sure her vote was the right move. But with people like Webb, Joe Biden, Chris Dodd, John Edwards and Barack Obama lined up on the other side she doesn’t have much primary cover, especially as Bush sharpens his sabers. Wesley Clark is beloved in Iowa so that helps and he should be utilized at every opportunity. That Clinton was playing for the general election is the reality. As for
Obama, something I’ve been thinking about for quite a few days is the more I
picture Obama being in New Hampshire when the vote took place the less and less
I’m believing it was an accident or scheduling problems. It’s the best of both
worlds for him, especially looking out over the long run.

So if the status quo reigns on Iran through the next several months into the
primaries and nothing serious happens on Iran, Clinton won’t be harmed at all
by her vote on Kyl-Lieberman. But if anything serious develops or if tensions
continue to rise, with Iran taking center stage in the press, the primary gamble
Clinton made could backfire. If it starts to look like Iran is in Bush’s crosshairs,
anyone who voted to give him more battle space to ponder a move on Iran is going
to be hurt. On the other hand, if Clinton snags the nomination her vote on Kyl-Lieberman
will serve her very well in the general, which is their play. She’ll be seen
as strong, sending a message to Iran and their allies, as well as our friends,
including Israel, that she’s not afraid to do what’s necessary, portraying her
as a serious player in foreign policy who can stand down the bad guys and do
whatever it takes, even if it’s not popular with progressives. That’s Clinton’s gambit. With her
commanding lead nationally, the campaign is obviously hoping it solidifies perception
enough in Iowa that she’s going to win that more people move into her column to solidify her Iowa poll numbers even further. Everyone likes to vote for a winner. However, as Mike Lux writes, she’s
vulnerable on the second choice angle, which matters a lot in Iowa, something
Chase Martyn has talked about as well.


I e-mailed multiple folks on the Hillary campaign staff how they were doing
in terms of the second choice, and got radio silence back, which I’m pretty
sure is a bad sign.

That this would be the case makes logical sense to me. If you are for the
wildmen, Kucinich and Gravel, Hillary isn’t going to be your second choice.
If you get behind Dodd because of his strong stand on FISA, or Richardson
because of his strong stand on residual troops, Hillary’s probably not your
backup choice. And with most frontrunners, the people not with them are looking
for somebody else in general, and tend to coalesce behind whatever alternative
is still in the game.

Iowa
Caucus Report: Second Choice Politics

But the real danger for Clinton right now is that there’s quite a few weeks
until Thanksgiving, which gives Mr. Bush and his pal Dick Cheney plenty of opportunity
to talk tough on Iran, keeping the sabers rattling loudly, reminding people
again and again of how we got into Iraq, which isn’t what Clinton wants people thinking about. It’s clear Putin is happy to play his
part in this drama as well. Also don’t forget that Ahmadinejad
has Jalili
now in place, replacing Khamenei’s man Larijani on the nuclear
front. The hardliners are headliners on both sides now.

James Webb’s legislation demanding Bush come to Congress before engaging in
war with Iran, with Clinton now as a co-sponsor, offers a huge opportunity and
cover for Clinton that could innoculate her from the nervousness her Kyl-Lieberman
vote has caused many.

In the end it all depends on George W. Bush and what plays out on Iran before
the primaries. Watch the Iran news and what rhetoric comes out of the White
House. People are sick of the Iraq war and they don’t want to hear talk of another. That Clinton may have inadvertently tied her fate to Mr. Bush’s wildly eratic militant mood swings is not a place I would want to be this far out. It’s a long time until January.

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Obama’s Iran Problem

People are talking a lot today about Clinton’s Iran problem and the fact she’s
sent a
letter to Iowans explaining
her vote on Kyl-Lieberman. Now Sam
Stein at Huffington Post
brings back a May 2007 interview Barack Obama did
with Haaretz. Frankly, I missed it and I read Haaretz regularly. This is quite
interesting, especially if you remember the exchange shown in the video above,
where Obama said he’d meet with Ahmadinejad and other leaders his first year,
without preconditions, but Clinton said she wouldn’t commit to such a meeting,
though she still intended to reach out through diplomatic efforts in other ways.
Stein on Obama:


This past July, Senator Barack Obama, D-IL, stirred up the campaign trail
by proclaiming that as commander-in-chief he would personally meet with Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad without preconditions within his first year
in office. It is a position Obama has stuck to adamantly and one that his
campaign has emphasized as a critical foreign policy difference with his Democratic
rival Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-NY.

But in a little-noticed interview in May 2007 with the Israeli paper, Ha’aretz,
Obama advocated what appears to be a more conditional, nuanced approach to
Iran. In an exchange with reporter Shmuel Rosner, Obama said it would be inappropriate
to pursue “full-scale” diplomatic negotiations with Tehran without
seeing positive steps beforehand. … ..

Early
Obama Comments Indicate Shift On Iran

The blog post to which Stein refers above is by Shmuel Rosner, Haaretz.com’s chief
U.S. correspondent, quoting Obama, revealing a much different view on Iran than
we’ve been hearing lately. No preconditions in the CNN YouTube debate is very clear, but that’s not what
Obama was saying in May.


He is still in favor of talking to the Iranians, no pre-conditions attached,
but made some interesting statements clarifying his position in our conversation.

I asked whether the U.S. should talk with Tehran even as the centrifuges
are still spinning and producing more enriched uranium. Obama’s answer is
both yes and no: “Its important to have low-level talks” with Iran
even without them freezing the enrichment, he said.

However, high-level talks “will not be appropriate without some
sense of progress” on the enrichment issue. Obama said that the talks
with Iran initiated by the Bush administration over Iraq are a “step
in the right direction.” It will “establish a pattern of dialogue”
with Iran, Obama hopes. … ..

Obama
to Haaretz: More pressure on Iran urgently needed

What’s interesting, is that when I went back to his Senate race against Alan
Keyes, I found something even more alarming suggesting there is no
clear rationale behind Obama’s Iran philosophy or the policies that unfold from it.


U.S. Senate candidate Barack Obama suggested Friday that the United
States one day might have to launch surgical missile strikes into Iran and
Pakistan to keep extremists from getting control of nuclear bombs.

… .. “The big question is going to be, if Iran is resistant to these
pressures, including economic sanctions, which I hope will be imposed if they
do not cooperate, at what point are we going to, if any, are we going to take
military action?” Obama asked. … ..

… .. “In light of the fact that we’re now in Iraq, with all the problems
in terms of perceptions about America that have been created, us launching
some missile strikes into Iran is not the optimal position for us to be in,”
he said.

“On the other hand, having a radical Muslim theocracy in possession
of nuclear weapons is worse. So I guess my instinct would be to err on not
having those weapons in the possession of the ruling clerics of Iran. …
And I hope it doesn’t get to that point. But realistically, as I watch how
this thing has evolved, I’d be surprised if Iran blinked at this point.”
… ..

Obama
would consider missile strikes on Iran

I’ve contended all along that there is absolutely no evidence whatsoever that
Barack Obama would have voted against the Iraq war resolution had he been in
the Senate at the time. His statements slamming Clinton on the Kyl-Lieberman vote, while not being around himself, is one thing, especially when he voted for similar status for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard himself. But the bold portions above was the state of play when he
was running against Alan Keyes and beating him very badly way back in 2004. Though Obama clearly
states missile strikes are not an “optimal position” to take, in the
same breath he states that we must be prepared to strike. It’s good to remember
that in 2004 we knew even less than we do today about Iran’s nuclear ambitions, with our intelligence woefully lacking back them,
but that didn’t stop Mr. Obama from crafting his own version of “all options are
on the table,” with a little Cuban missile blink language added for emphasis.

However, when you take Obama’s statements on Iran in their entirety, even looking back to 2004, his statements are nothing short of alarming and indistinguishable from anyone else, Republican or Democrat. Obama’s conflicting statements on Iran don’t show a maturing attitude as much as political posturing as the moment dictates on one of the most vital issues we face today, with a carefully crafted
I’ll kick their butts message woven in. Clinton takes a hawkish position, with muscular diplomacy leading the one, but at least she’s consistent. I’m not sure what he’s actually
saying at this point, but it’s certainly no different than the usual political status quo we get from everyone else. It’s long past time his supporters started noticing.

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Regarding ‘Senator No-Show’

It’s clear that when I lay things out the way they are, an obstinate minority
of you actually believe reality isn’t as I cover it. Or you believe that it’s coming from bias or favoritism.

This is nothing new and I’ve said it before, but maybe it will help some
of you to read it again, this time from someone else. Via Garance
Franke-Ruta at Tapped
.


It seems to me that if Obama thought the Kyl-Lieberman Iran Resolution vote
was as important a line in the sand on a march to war with Iran as he is now
making it out to be, he could have taken the time to come back to Washington,
give a speech on the issue, and urge all his Democratic Senate colleagues
to vote no, too. And then he could have cast a vote himself.

(snip)

Instead, he managed to be out of town on the day of the vote, and then did not issue a statement on it until 10 p.m. that evening. So much for “personal involvement” in stopping the U.S. from “being dragged into another war”!

(snip)

A third example: Just a few weeks ago, Obama managed to be absent from the
floor of the Senate when it came time to vote on a controversial resolution
to condemn MoveOn’s advertisement about Gen. Petraeus. Clinton and Dodd voted
against the measure; Obama issued a statement condemning the entire exercise
as distracting theatrics.

All told, these episodes have started to make me wonder if maybe Obama would
have somehow managed to be absent from the Senate the day of the 2002 vote
on authorizing the use of force in Iraq, as well. It is a harsh thing to suggest,
but his own campaign is now arguing that “we’re seeing history repeat
itself” when it comes to the power of a vote he decided to skip, and
his track record on missing controversial votes is increasingly disturbing.
U.S. Senators have a rare power — there are but 100 of them for a nation
of 300 million — and when they chose to use their voices but not their votes,
they are abdicating their duties as elected officials. If Obama really thinks
Clinton said just yes to war with Iran, he needs to explain why he couldn’t
be bothered to say no.

NOT
VOTING IS NOT THE SAME AS VOTING NO.

As I’ve been saying for months, given his votes in the Senate and his behavior throughout the campaign there is no reason to assume Mr. Obama wouldn’t have voted along with Clinton, Edwards, Biden, Dodd and the rest on the Iraq war. He’s not distinguished himself once on Iraq while in the Senate, having the same record as Clinton. He skipped on the Cornyn vote. He also just recently, in the Dartmouth debate, refused to pledge to get troops out of Iraq before 2013, just like Clinton and Edwards. This latest action with Obama not only missing the Kyl-Lieberman vote, but not making a statement for hours afterwards, is puzzling. But that Obama also skipped the chance to call Clinton on it at the last debate, when Edwards made a point of doing so, seems even more troubling. It’s not enough to attack opponents when your own actions don’t pass the test.

Oh and by the way, if you think the title of this post is original, check out the URL to Garance’s post.

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Obama Ducks Vote then Attacks Clinton

Finally, a direct attack from Obama on Clinton. First, on torture, Obama swallows the Washington Post line even though that was demolished yesterday. Next, her vote on Kyl-Lieberman, which is certainly fair game. Trouble is Mr. Obama has no standing to make it.


“I don’t think it disqualified her, but I think it speaks to her judgment,
and it speaks to my judgment,” Obama said. “It speaks to how we
will make decisions going forward.”

“I think her judgment was flawed on this issue,” he said.

“This was a vote for war,” he added. “You can’t give this
president a blank check and be surprised when he cashes it.”

Obama:
Clinton vote on Iran shows ‘flawed’ judgment

You don’t get to criticize a Senate vote when you couldn’t be bothered to show
up to vote yourself. It also doesn’t help that you didn’t mention the vote during the Dartmouth debate either, even after Edwards slammed her on it.

–End post–

Well, I can’t actually end it here because this is something I’ve been talking
about since the vote happened. However, after I saw Mr. Obama’s op-ed today
in the Union Leader coupled with the story on CNN.com, forgive me if my where
the hell were you?
alarm went off.


The amendment, offered by Sens. Joe Lieberman and Jon Kyl, directly links
the ongoing war in Iraq — including our troop presence — to checking the
threat from Iran. The amendment opens with 17 findings that highlight Iranian
influence within Iraq. It then states that we have to “transition(s)
and structure” our “military presence in Iraq” to counter the
threat from Iran, and states that it is “a critical national interest
of the United States” to prevent the Iranian government from exerting
influence inside Iraq.

Why is this so dangerous? The Bush administration could use language like
this to justify a continued troop presence in Iraq as long as it perceives
a threat from Iran. Even worse, the Bush administration could use the language
in Lieberman-Kyl to justify an attack on Iran as a part of the ongoing war
in Iraq.

Sen.
Barack Obama: Five years after Iraq war vote, we’re still foolishly rattling
our sabers

Now a little quiz. Who said this?


“”If I thought there was any way it could be used as a pretense
to launch an invasion of Iran I would have voted no. … .. I am opposed to
military action in Iran … ..To say we need to pressure the Iranians to change
their course in the Middle East and I want to do it by nonmilitary means,
that’s what my vote was all about. … .. (Defense Secretary Robert Gates)
was as clear as could be that there are no plans for that to happen.”

Senator
Dick Durbin
who opposed the Iraq war, and is supporting Mr. Obama’s bid
for president, voted for the Kyl-Lieberman non-binding sense of the Senate.

To be clear, I don’t think any of these people should be voting for this type
of sense of the Senate or what Obama supported as long as we’ve
got cowboy George in office, but a little perspective is in order after Obama’s
harangue this morning. This is especially true when Obama couldn’t be bothered
to show up for the vote himself.

What was he doing?

Campaigning.

Why didn’t he vote?

Allegedly because the vote wasn’t to be called.

Note to Mr. Obama: If there is any possibiliy of a vote happening in D.C. that could truly
differentiate you from your main competitor be prepared to get your sanctimonious rear
end back to Washington or better yet, don’t leave until you’re absolutely sure
it won’t be called up. Biden, Dodd and Clinton voted, so your excuse is just lame. Besides, ever heard of
a plane, sir?

It also took
him all day to release a statement on the vote
.

I truly do want Obama to challenge Clinton and take it to her. I want to see
him fight. But it seems a bit spineless to attack someone for a vote you skipped
out on and didn’t bother to comment on from New Hampshire, where you were campaigning
for president. Can you imagine the press moment if immediately upon hearing
the vote had taken place Obama had come out and made a statement immediately?
Why didn’t he? Couldn’t this
statement
have been given on camera wherever he was immediately after the
Kyl-Lieberman vote? Why did it take all day to get his press secretary to release
it? Come on, cable news channels would have jumped on this moment and Obama
would have had a big issue in his pocket.


Senator Obama clearly recognizes the serious threat posed by Iran. However,
he does not agree with the president that the best way to counter that threat
is to keep large numbers of troops in Iraq, and he does not think that now
is the time for saber-rattling towards Iran. In fact, he thinks that our large
troop presence in Iraq has served to strengthen Iran – not weaken it. He believes
that diplomacy and economic pressure, such as the divestment bill that he
has proposed, is the right way to pressure the Iranian regime. Accordingly,
he would have opposed the Kyl-Lieberman amendment had he been able to vote
today.

Again, I’m against this stuff, but I’m equally against taking credit for “judgment”
when you didn’t show up to stand up.

As for Obama’s claim that the legislation linked Iran and Iraq together, why
is this so shocking? Is he really so naive as to not know that the Maliki government
is already linked to Iran? Besides, he warned
of the link in a speech of his own
. I’ve cut a couple of sentences out of
it which clearly illustrate Mr. Obama is as worried as anyone.


“Such a reduced but active presence will also send a clear message to
hostile countries like Iran and Syria that we intend to remain a key player
in this region. … … (snip) … ..Make no mistake if the Iranians and Syrians
think they can use Iraq as another Afghanistan or a staging area from which
to attack Israel or other countries, they are badly mistaken. It is in our
national interest to prevent this from happening.”

Then there’s that other nagging detail about Mr. Obama’s Senate performances.
He’s voted the exact same way with Hillary Clinton on Iraq throughout his tenure.
Exactly. But he’s got a
new web ad
talking about it anyway. Never mind, just like Clinton (even Edwards, I’m sorry to say), Barack Obama could not pledge he’d have our troops out by 2013 either! Seeing a pattern yet? It also wasn’t Barack Obama who fought tooth and
nail to get resolutions to the Senate floor to end the Iraq war. The person
with those creds is Senator Russ Feingold.

Obama brings up something important today, however.


This is not a debate about 2002; it’s about the future, and in that debate
I can run on, and not from, my record.

Sen. Barack Obama:

I don’t agree with Senator Clinton on Kyl-Lieberman. But she showed up, put
her vote down and was prepared to catch hell for it, which she has. Not for
nothin’ that Wes Clark and Joseph Wilson, two people with strong anti war bona
fides, including that Clark has his face plastered on StopIranWar.com, both back her up. As much as I hate the Kyl-Lieberman vote of Clinton’s, it’s hard to argue with these two men, as well as Dick Durbin who was always against the Iraq war. You may not agree with Clinton all the time, because I sure
don’t. But when she’s asked to put her name on the line she shows up and does
so, then is willing to take the heat. That’s character. I’m not sure what ducking
a critical vote then slamming your opponent much later on it says about Obama.

You’ll have to decide if these things matter or not.

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The Iran Debate

As far as I’m concerned anyone who voted for Iraq who is willing to vote blindly
for the Lieberman-Kyl legislation didn’t learn anything from their vote. Of course I’m talking specifically about Senator Clinton. We’ll get to the 2013 issue later today.

Edwards nailed it last night.

Clinton’s vote yesterday to designate Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corp as “a foreign terrorist organization” was a blunder of monumental
proportions. She evidently thinks she’s got the nomination locked up and it’s
off to general election mode. It started last Sunday. But the hubris involved
in blithely signing on to the Lieberman legislation shows she doesn’t think
people are paying attention.

Thank the heavens for Senators Biden and Dodd, along with James Webb who got this one right a long time ago.

The urgency of rebutting this slowly sliding bomb Iran narrative has been front
and center for months. But that hasn’t kept the right-wing from pushing the
talking point further and further, which Lieberman, with the help of Democrats,
pushed forward another inch yesterday. The neocons are not deterred by Bush’s
incompetence. This coming weekend Fox “News” channel will do their
part by running a special, “Iran:
Ticking Bomb,”
which Sean Hannity happily touts and is eager to promote.

All this saber rattling comes as Secretary
Gates asks for $190 billion more for war funding
, with former general Casey issuing dire
warnings about our military forces.


Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates asked Congress yesterday to approve an
additional $42.3 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, bringing the
Bush administration’s 2008 war funding request to nearly $190 billion — the
largest single-year total for the wars so far.

The move came as Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the Army chief of staff and former
top U.S. commander in Iraq, warned lawmakers that the Army is stretched dangerously
thin because of current war operations and would probably have trouble responding
to a major conflict elsewhere. “The current demand for our forces exceeds
the sustainable supply,” Casey said yesterday. “We are consumed
with meeting the demands of the current fight and are unable to provide ready
forces as rapidly as necessary for other potential contingencies.” …
..

Anyone voting for the Lieberman-Kyl legislation, regardless of the non-binding
nature, is simply ignoring what Bush has done with the authority Congress gave
him on Iraq. Haven’t Democrats learned anything? It’s stunning that Clinton
would look beyond the facts to posture so egregiously, either to make herself
look tough, or to support our Israeli friends. It’s irresponsible and dangerous and also ignores reality.
There are plenty of liberal Israelis who want to stop the cycle we’ve been on in the Middle East and really work for peace. It’s obvious Lieberman isn’t after peace and anyone
following his lead is deluded to think he’s got the answer for the Middle East. All he offers is more war, death and destruction. With the Lieberman-Kyl non-binding legislation we’ve reached a whole new level. The fact that Clinton was willing to go along with it is worthy of magnifying, especially considering her Iraq vote and what’s transpired in between.

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Clinton Vote on Iran Mimics Iraq Vote

The vote today on the Lieberman-Kyl was a very bad vote. It wasn’t as bad as
the Iraq vote many Democrats in the Senate cast, but it’s certainly how the
Iraq war began. This is an ominous development. I’m with James Webb, as well
as Joe Biden and Chris Dodd, who also voted against the legislation.


Those who regret their vote five years ago to authorize military action in
Iraq should think hard before supporting this approach. Because, in my view,
it has the same potential to do harm where many are seeking to do good. …
.. … We haven’t had one hearing on this. I’m on the Foreign
Relations Committee, I’m on the Armed Services Committee. We are about
to vote on something that may fundamentally change the way the United States
views the Iranian military and we haven’t had one hearing. This is not
the way to make foreign policy. It’s not the way to declare war.

James Webb
(via Think Progress)

There are reports on MSNBC that Obama wasn’t feeling well, but he missed the vote.
That’s unfortunate and he certainly wants to be his best in the debate tonight,
but it doesn’t say much since this is the second time he’s walked around taking
a stand on something important, though obviously missing the vote on Iran today
far outweighs his Cornyn behavior. This is a bad pattern for him whatever the reasons.

As for Clinton, this is the path she took on her way to voting for the Iraq
war. Posture strongly and load up for the worst. It’s not surprising, because
she wants to show toughness. Let’s also remember she is still the junior senator
from New York. Let’s also be honest about something else.

This non-binding resolution was about Iran’s moves in Iraq, but it was also
very much about Israel. We’ve been talking about this a lot lately, which brings
me to something I read recently that is foreshadowing for worse things to come.


But one sentence from the Hillary Clinton press release of September 10 stands
out. (Curiously, the the statement is not up on Clinton’s campaign website.)
In staking out her position on "Standing with Israel against terrorism,"
Hillary Clinton defends Israel’s right to exist with "… an undivided
Jerusalem as its capital." Oddly enough, this places her in direct contradiction
with the plan put forward by a certain President Bill Clinton in December
2000.

He proposed dividing Jerusalem:

The general principle is that Arab areas are Palestinian and Jewish ones
are Israeli. This would apply to the Old City as well. I urge the two sides
to work on maps to create maximum contiguity for both sides. … ..

(snip)

So, candidate Hillary Clinton is running to the right, not only of former
President Bill Clinton, but also of the centrist Israeli Government. In fact,
Hillary Clinton’s press release says nothing at all about a two-state solution,
about a Palestinian state, or even a peace process. (Palestinians do, though,
exist as terrorists and/or as promoters of incitement). … ..

Clinton
vs. Clinton on Israel, by Daniel Levy

The Clinton
Parameters
are important. They are also where Democrats have stood since
his presidency. I have a request for a comment into the Clinton camp, as well
as having asked for the press release quoted from above, or a link, so I can
read it for myself and verify it. I have yet to get a response, though I’ve
had a conversation about it and traded emails as well. I hope to have an answer
for you and when I do I’ll report it. They’ve responded to every single request I have made so far, so stay tuned.

Clinton’s vote today is a harbinger for more saber rattling on Iran. It also
shows she’s learned nothing from her earlier Iraq vote. It is also a sign that
her Middle East policy will likely be weighted towards Israel, which hasn’t
been doing the U.S. or Israel any good at all. There’s only one thing Clinton
and others who voted in favor of Lieberman’s Iran amendment fear more than Iran’s
possible involvement in Iraq, or them going nuclear, and that’s standing up
to the Israel lobby at large. It’s not going to happen. As much as people talk
about change, things surrounding our policy towards Israel stay the same. It’s
dangerous, but no one seems to have the courage to join with liberal Israelis
who truly want piece. Clinton voting with the neoconservatives today was wrong any way you analyze it.

Biden and Dodd voted against the Lieberman-Kyl legislation when all eyes were
on them (full
roll call
). Coupled with Biden’s Iraq legislation today that passed, he’s had one hell of
a day. They both deserve a lot of credit. The Democrats who voted for Lieberman’s
nonsense don’t know what they’re doing, which is how we got into Iraq. Like Iraq, it signals danger and a possibility of one small
step at a time to kaboom.

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Let Ahmadinejad Speak

VIDEO: Lee Bollinger’s speech
graphic via Ms. Internment

What’s amazing is that someone at Columbia didn’t think to get permission from
AIPAC before inviting Mr. Ahmadinejad speak.

It doesn’t take a genius to understand why wingnuts don’t want Iran’s president
to speak at Columbia. He might show up looking and sounding human, instead of
the thugocrat he actually is, disguising his real thoughts about all things
we hold dear. Columbia made a daring, important decision to invite Mr. Ahmadinejad
to Columbia, and they should wear the outrage as a medal. Powerline is already
declaring it’s “Columbia’s Disgrace – Part 8.” What cowards.


This event raises deep and complicated issues about how best to express our
commitment to intellectual freedom, and to our free way of life. Although
we believe in free and open debate at Columbia and should never suppress points
of view, we are also committed to academic standards. A high-quality academic
discussion depends on intellectual honesty but, unfortunately, Mr. Ahmadinejad
has proven himself, time and again, to be uninterested in whether his words
are true. Therefore, my personal opinion is that he should not be invited
to speak. Mr. Ahmadinejad is a reprehensible and dangerous figure who presides
over a repressive regime, is responsible for the death of American soldiers,
denies the Holocaust, and calls for the destruction of Israel. It would be
deeply regrettable if some misread this invitation as lending prestige or
legitimacy to his views.

Our university is a pluralistic place, and I recognize that others within
our community take a different view in good faith, and that they have the
right to extend invitations that I personally would not extend. I know that
we will learn from each other in discussing the difficult questions prompted
by this invitation. … ..

STATEMENT
BY DAVID M.SCHIZER RE: SIPA INVITATION TO MAHMOUD AHMADINEJAD

Mr. Ahmadinejad is unlikely to fall into any traps. Sociopaths rarely do, especially
if they’ve already got the limelight, and Mr. Bush has made sure that’s the
case
. After all, Ahmadinejad is not O.J. But will this visit make it less likely
that the U.S. will go to war with Iran?

Zbig doesn’t
think so.


“When the president flatly asserts they are seeking nuclear weapons,
he’s overstating the facts,” he said. “We are suspicious. We have
strong suspicions, but we don’t have facts that they are.”

Brzezinski, who served under President Jimmy Carter, said he is not sure
how to interpret Iran’s intentions. Iran has insisted its nuclear program
is intended solely for peaceful purposes.

“I think it’s quite possible that they are seeking weapons or positioning
themselves to have them, but we have very scant evidence to support that,”
he said. “And the president of the United States, especially after Iraq,
should be very careful about the veracity of his public assertions.”
… ..

But Ahmadinejad showing up at a U.S. university is getting an interesting conversation
going. Another wingnut, Hugh Hewitt, also calls it “Columbia’s Complete
Disgrace.”

Our universities are to be free speech zones where all manner of discourse
is encouraged and all voices are given space. We stand by Israel at every turn
and certainly steadfastly on the incendiary comments Iran’s president makes
on wiping Israel out. However, nowhere in our Constitution does it say that
we should sacrifice our own beliefs for theirs.

After last week’s Republican MoveOn.org spectacle I find it chilling that everyone
who doesn’t agree with the right-wing is now subject to censorship. Ahmadinejad
is a thug, a suspected terrorist and an alleged madman. But we haven’t proven
a thing against him. Republicans evidently see no merit in exposing a man such
as Ahmadinejad, or maybe they’re just scared he’ll not bring his greatest anti
Semitic hits. Doesn’t change the fact that the man ignores history and the facts
and everyone knows it.

But from what I hear Mr. Ahmadinejad is going to show up and actually take
uncensored questions from students in the audience on any subject. Our president
won’t even do that.

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About Iran



Q Can I also ask you about Iran, as well? Do you have any response to the
comments from Iran\’s supreme leader, talking about attacking interests around
the world —

MR. SNOW: I believe the Ayatollah was referring to, if the United
States attacked — let\’s see, I have said it, the Secretary of Defense has
said it, the President has said it: We\’re not invading Iran. So I think this
is — he\’s spinning a hypothetical about something that is not contemplated.

Q Why did he have to say it?

MR. SNOW: Why did he have to say it?

Q No, why do you have to say it?

MR. SNOW: Because you guys kept trying to report that we were doing it, and
we kept saying, no, we\’re not.

Q — forces in your backyard, aircraft carriers, missiles, submarines?

MR. SNOW: Yes. That\’s correct.

Q Does that give you a little pause —

MR. SNOW: I don\’t think so.

Q — as an American?

MR. SNOW: It doesn\’t give me pause. It gives me reassurance to know that
we were able to deploy people.

Q You don\’t think we should be worried about that?

MR. SNOW: No.

Q Why?

MR. SNOW: Because we quite often deploy carrier task forces all around the
world.

Q Two task forces in their backyards?

MR. SNOW: I don\’t believe it\’s their backyard. I believe it is the ocean
that also encompasses a whole series of other nations. It is not as if they
are parking outside of Iranian ports. As a matter of fact, as you know, the
area of passage through the Straight of Hormuz is quite narrow — 21 miles
— and we are talking about deploying through an area where — that includes
a number of key allies, including the Gulf states, Saudi Arabia, and others.
… ..

Press
Briefing Transcript
(emphasis added)

 

UPDATE: As you all note in the comments, the C-SPAN YouTube clip that was provided above is no longer available. It\’s replaced by the transcript.

Craig
Unger
talks about Iran.

So does Vali
Nasr
.

Then there\’s Tony Snow, via
TPM Muckraker
. Bottom line: Why would anyone think we want to attack Iran?
Who, us?

Nevertheless, the mullahs vow to attack
if we invade.

No one believes we\’ll go boots on the ground in Iran because we can\’t.

This dialogue is insane. The use of force is not an option right now (see Iraq), though Israel would like us to, but we won\’t. Will they make a move? All due respect to Mr. Unger, that is the real question.

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The Iran Game

IRAN VIDEO
Bombs are about to start dropping
and Andrea Mitchell fact checks Karballa rumors.


It\’s the 28th anniversary of the Iranian revolution so why not beat the drums of the dumb war.

On misinformation channel one we\’ve got Tucker talking to Arnaud de Borchgrave,
editor in chief to UPI and editor at large for the Washington Times,
which should tell you where he\’s slanted. Except for the fact that he\’s got
specifics. Watch
it.

Next we have a report from Andrea Mitchell today that clarified a few things,
namely the misinformation on the KarbalLa attack. Every cable network speculated
that it was carried out through the involvement of Iran.


The second official said: \”We believe it\’s possible the executors of
the attack were Iranian or Iranian-trained.\” – CNN

NBC news and Mitchell provide some very rare push back on the White House bluster.
Watch
it.

We don\’t know anything for sure. Oh, except that Mr. Bush has put Admiral Fallon
in charge and sent carrier groups to the Middle East, all to watch Iran. Whether
watching turns to reach out and touch Iran we\’ll have to wait and see. And though
there will be no boots on the ground, everyone is speculating about bombs overhead.

One thing we do know is that the language coming out of the White House sounds
eerily similar to something
we\’ve heard before
. Cue the video…


BUSH: The Iraqi people cannot flourish under a dictator that oppresses them—threatens
them.

Our struggle is not with the Iranian people. As a matter of fact, we want
them to flourish.

Iraq is land rich in culture and resources and talent.

\”Countdown\”
with Keith Olbermann

Fast forward a few years, cue Bush video on Iran…


And the Iranian people are proud people, and they‘ve got a great history
and a great tradition.

If we fail to act in the face of danger, the people of Iraq will continue
to live in brutal submission. The regime will remain unstable. The region
will remain unstable, with little hope of freedom and isolated from the progress
of our times.

One of the things that the Iranian government is doing is they‘ve begun
to isolate their nation, to the harm of the Iranian people.

Hopefully this can be done peacefully.

I believe we can solve our problems peacefully.

All options are on the table.

All options are on the table.

\”Countdown\”
with Keith Olbermann

Now let us compare, with analysis and a little reality, please.


OLBERMANN: The accusations are well known, but does it shock you to hear
just how close the president‘s rhetoric about Iran is compared to his
past rhetoric about Iraq?

LEVERETT: No, because in many ways the rhetoric in the run-up to the war
on Iraq worked. The president singled Iraq out to justify military action
there on three particular issues, Iraq‘s links to terrorism, including
what were alleged to be direct links to al Qaeda, its weapons of mass destruction
capabilities, and it‘s regional meddling, that was making the region
unstable.

And if you look at the rhetoric on Iran right now, Iran is being singled
out for basically the same things, its links to terrorism. The president basically,
in the State of the Union Addressee, equated Iran as a Shia version of al
Qaeda. Of course, there is the nuclear issue and concern about the Iran‘s
weapons of mass destruction ambitions. And then the president is accusing
Iran of regional meddling, being the principal source of instability in the
region, much as he did with Iraq in the run up to the invasion of Iraq in
2005.

\”Countdown\”
with Keith Olbermann

The rhetoric has been unleashed.
The stage
is set
. When will the bombing begin?

Congress, you out there? Or can\’t you do two things at once.

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Of Iraq and Iran

Michael Ware on Iraq.


The wild speculation needs to stop. But with Fox
\”News\”
blaring things like White House Holding Back Report
Detailing Iran\’s Meddling in Iraq,
can there be any doubt there\’s an agenda
already afoot? Conservative bloggers are grabbing hold. Fox is saying that the report is being held back for fear of
Ahmadinejad\’s reaction. Are they kidding?

Read Juan
Cole
.


Note that the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, which controls
Najaf, is Bush\’s major ally in Iraq even though it is close to Iran. Those
fighting the Najaf government and Iraqi army forces were anti-Iranian. Rightwing
bloggers seem confused on these points.

Robert Baer brings up the IRGC, Iran\’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, five
of whom are still in custody and charged with helping Iraqis kill Americans.


I called up an American contractor in Baghdad who runs convoys from Kuwait
every day and asked him just how much damage.\”Let me put it this way,\”he
said.\”In Basra today the currency is the Iranian toman, not the Iraqi
dinar.\”He said his convoys now are forced to pay a 40% surcharge to Shi\’a
militias and Iraqi police in the south, many of whom are affiliated with IRGC.

Are
the Iranians Out for Revenge?

Nobody should doubt that Iran is involved in Iraq. Look at a map. They share
a huge border. But the stories currently circulating simply aren\’t believable, though it\’s certainly not crazy to think Iran is training people. We just don\’t know anything for sure.

Wouldn\’t it be ironic if the oil men in the White House revved up a real
incident with Iran, when all they really wanted to do was tweak the Iranians
enough to be able to put some of the blame on them for Iraq falling? As I\’ve
stipulated before, they didn\’t put Adm. Fallon in charge for nothing. But do the White
House oil men want gas at $5/gallon, as Jim Cramer has warned, with economic chaos not far behind?

The military escalation, aka build up, which Maliki says he does not want isn\’t
for Iraq. It\’s for Iran. But is it all for show? Unfortunately, Bush has earned
the reputation he\’s got and many are convinced he\’s ready to rumble all the
way into Iran. I am not. (Let me add to be clear, this does not preclude airstrikes. But boots on the ground will not happen.)

There is no way the Joint Chiefs or any respectable commander in U.S. military
would tell Bush to pull the trigger on Iran. It would be utter madness. Our
soldiers in Iraq would be slaughtered.

Baer wonders if the Iranians are out for revenge. It could be about making them sweat. Ahmadinejad is at a low point in Iran.
All this revving up might be to make the Iranian power bench and the mullahs nervous.
It\’s hardball played by a team known to have an itchy trigger finger.

Somebody needs to start talking or making concessions. The former is out and the latter depends on just how weak Ahmadinejad is.

It doesn\’t get any more dangerous than this.

UPDATE (1:16 p.m.): Tucker Carlson has decided to mimic Fox. He just had an interview with Arnaud de Borchgrave the editor in chief of UPI on Iran. Borchgrave said flatly that we are \”headed to a military showdown\” with Iran as \”part of the war on terror.\” That\’s not all, as for what\’s in the works and what Congress would do about it, Borchgrave gets awfully specific.


\”As I understand it, it\’s a three night campaign of bombing; some 700 aim points throughout Iran, including 58 that would require deep penetration bombs. Of course, there would be a lot of shouting, but all of that would be over rather quickly.\” – Arnaud de Borchgrave

UPDATE (8:44 a.m.): The Pentagon has stopped selling F-14 parts to Iran. Good move. More of this type action, please. On another note, we may see target practice from sea on certain points, but Bush will not invade Iran. We need a larger strategy than war on this one. Stopping F-16 sales is a start. Diplomacy would also be nice.

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Amir Taheri is Back and the WSJ has Got Him

Surely you remember him.

He's the guy who floated the bogus Iranian badge story right before Prime Minister
Olmert was to visit President Bush. The same story
I blew out
of the water, which the dogged reporter Larry
Cohler-Esses
took even further, after I got the Simon Wiesenthal Center
on the record as pushing Taheri's
bunk
.

In fact, Taheri was so thoroughly smacked around on the incident he
felt compelled to release a clarification. However, that didn't stop Bush from
inviting him
to the White House
to get advice on Iran. No wonder our foreign policy strategy
is so screwed. With people like Taheri giving us advice we hardly need an enemy.

Now Mr. Taheri is back, with a featured editorial in the Wall Street Journal.
What a perfect match. Neocons and wingnuts together in print. Priceless.


… Before he provoked the war, Mr. Nasrallah faced growing criticism not
only from the Shiite community, but also from within Hezbollah. Some in the
political wing expressed dissatisfaction with his overreliance (sic) on the
movement's military and security apparatus. Speaking on condition of anonymity,
they described Mr. Nasrallah's style as “Stalinist” and pointed
to the fact that the party's leadership council (shura) has not held a full
session in five years. Mr. Nasrallah took all the major decisions after clearing
them with his Iranian and Syrian contacts, and made sure that, on official
visits to Tehran, he alone would meet Iran's “Supreme Guide,” Ali
Khamenei.

Mr. Nasrallah justified his style by claiming that involving too many people
in decision-making could allow “the Zionist enemy” to infiltrate
the movement. Once he had received the Iranian green light to provoke the
war, Mr. Nasrallah acted without informing even the two Hezbollah ministers
in the Siniora cabinet or the 12 Hezbollah members of the Lebanese Parliament.

Hezbollah
Didn't Win

Arab writers are beginning to lift the veil on what really happened in Lebanon.

Here's my advice to anyone new to Mr. Taheri's tales. Yes, even a broken clock
can be right twice a day, but my advice? Don't believe a word he says.

Instead, read, take in and and take to heart what The New York Times says today. They called the neocons out.

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EXPERT ANALYSIS: Charles Peña on Lebanon

EXPERT ANALYSIS: Charles Peña on Lebanon

The following is a guest post from Chuck Peña, whom I
heard speak
at Steve Clemons' New America
Foundation
in Washington, D.C. not too long ago. I was struck by Pena's
amazing candor, his blunt analysis and his unemotional clarity on the issues.
At the time he
was discussing
Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as Darfur. He was joined by
Peter Bergen and Christopher Preble. Preble and Peña are both involved
with the Coalition for a Realistic
Foreign Policy
.

Well, one thing led to another, because of new friends, which led to Chuck
agreeing to lend his expertise in guest blog posts when his time permits. One
post you may have seen recently was for Steve
Clemons
regarding Why Liberals (like Peter Beinart) Can't Win the War
on Terror.
Seriously, it's a must read.

Oh, but one thing you need to know. Mr. Pena is a libertarian. (NOTE: That's a small “l,” because Chuck is not a member of the party.) That should
set your brain afire. I hope you enjoy Chuck's first blog post, which is clear,
blunt and unequivocal. He's a former Director of Defense Policy Studies
for the Cato Institute, and is currently, well, you'll see. He's like a splash
of cold water in the face on a sleepy morning; an awakening in a world gone
dumb on political correctness and tired, outworn political conveniences.

“Un-war” is right and many others feel the same way too.


Coming from me this will probably come as a surprise to Taylor, but it is impossible
for the United States to adopt a do-nothing approach to the conflict in Lebanon.
On the one hand, the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah does not directly
threaten U.S. national security. Strictly speaking, it is an Israeli security
issue. Unfortunately, because successive U.S. administrations have needlessly
made Israeli security a component of U.S. security policy, what Israel does
has ripple effects all the way back to our shores. The fact that so many innocent
civilians – many of them Muslims – are being killed or displaced
affects Muslim opinion of the United States (which was already well below sea
level), which in turn affects U.S. security in the post-9/11 world. The growing
anti-American sentiment in the Muslim world (driven largely by opposition to
U.S. policies) is the foundation for hatred which is the steppingstone to violence
and the basis for a vast recruiting pool of would-be terrorists.

Because the Bush Administration is not advocating an immediate cease fire and
instead repeats the standard refrain (with many Democrats joining the chorus)
that Israel has the right to defend itself, many Muslims believe that the United
States does not care about the lives of innocent Muslims being killed as a result
of Israeli military operations. This impression is further reinforced by the
fact that the United States provides over $2 billion in military grants to Israel,
including a recent shipment of precision-guided bombs. Thus, the United States
is seen as complicit in the deaths resulting from Israeli military action –-
such as the attack on Qana. And it does not help when President Bush says, “We
care deeply about the people whose lives have been affected in Lebanon… And,
yes, we want to help people rebuild their lives” — implying that the United
States cares less about stopping the destruction, which is not lost on Muslims
around the world.

Although the United States may not be able to stop the conflict, it must take
steps that are in America's strategic interests. First and foremost, this means
recognizing that Israeli security is not a U.S. strategic interest — it is
a parochial interest not worth risking American security. Second, the United
States should support an immediate cease-fire rather than a conditional cease-fire
based on achieving broader Middle East goals, which will be more difficult (if
not impossible) and take longer to achieve. Third, the United States should
stop supplying the Israeli military with the precision weapons being used against
targets in Lebanon, which makes America an accomplice in the deaths of innocent
civilians. Fourth, U.S. rhetoric must stop holding Hezbollah responsible for
Israeli military action resulting in the deaths of innocent civilians — the last thing the United States needs to do is make Hezbollah a direct terrorist
threat. Finally, the United States cannot afford to use the conflict in Lebanon
as an excuse to take action against other targets unrelated to the al-Qaeda
terrorist threat, such as Iran and Syria (recently advocated by former CIA
director and neoconservative luminary James Woolsey
).

Charles
Pena

Via WashingtonNote:
Charles V. Peña is an adviser on the Straus Military Reform Project,
senior fellow with the Coalition for a Realistic Foreign Policy, senior fellow
with the George Washington University Homeland Security Policy Institute, and
analyst for MSNBC television. He is the author of Winning the Un-War: A New
Strategy for the War on Terrorism (Potomac Books, 2006), co-author of The Search
for WMD: Non-Proliferation, Intelligence and Pre-emption in the New Security
Environment (Dalhousie University, 2006), and co-author of Exiting Iraq: Why
the U.S. Must End the Military Occupation and Renew the War against al Qaeda
(Cato Institute, 2004).

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Rockets, Lebanon, and Tom Friedman

First, some very big and exciting news. Congratulations to Ned Lamont and everyone working so hard on his campaign. As Joh mentioned yesterday, the New York Times has endorsed him. Needless to say, this is huge, not because it's an editorial endorsement. It's huge because the Times has always backed Lieberman. Not even Bill Clinton can undo this damage. But there are more thoughts from Broder and the Courant, which endorses Joe.

Now, on to the sobering stuff, especially for a Sunday.

When the new Hezbollah rockets were first launched, the CNN general talked about the “khaybar”
missile, though it's actually a rocket. No one could confirm it at the time,
so a big void expanded into a pit. Nothing on the web about them either. I contacted
Billmon, but he didn't know about them, though we had a productive email exchange,
for which I'm grateful. I don't need to tell any of you how invaluable his insight
has been over these last weeks.

I was able to find out that Hezbollah's latest rocket is a longer version of
the Fadjr-3 or Fajr-3, depending on who's doing the spelling, which I discussed earlier. It's actually the Fadjr-5. (Here's pictures of the Fajr and the Zilzal missiles. The picture below is a Katyusha rocket.)
However, I found something else out recently. It is indeed called the Khaybar rocket
and for a very good reason. No doubt, Nasrallah
would prefer that identification, though the Israelis do not, as it
threatens innocent civilians deeper inside their country; but that's only one reason.

Hezbollah's Khaybar rocket is named after the Battle
of Khaybar
in 629 A.D. Khaybar is considered an historical oasis by anyone
who has written about the famous location, which is around 95 miles from Medina
(once spelled “Madinah”)
on the Arabian Peninsula, now known simply as Saudi Arabia. Khaybar was once
inhabited by Jews, but in the 629 A.D. battle, Muhammed and his followers attacked
Khaybar and expelled the Jews, though it wouldn't be until the next caliph (Islamic leader) before they would vacate the peninsula completely. This battle was significant
to Muslims because it signaled the beginning of the rise of Islam. The naming
of the missile is no doubt symbolic. Hezbollah's
new rocket, which is not guided like a missile, is being
reported
by the Israelis like this: “Khaibar-1 rockets were renamed, Iranian-made Fajr-5s.”
This is for obvious reasons.

Here's a very interesting

clip
from CNN
last night, which gives some background, which is helpful. Also
covered is the environmental disaster from an Israeli strike that released over
15,000 tons of oil along the Lebanese coast. CNN military analyst David Grange
explains the rocket at the end of the clip.

VIEW THE VIDEO

This second clip is a re-run of Tim Russert's interview of Thomas Friedman
on CNBC last weekend. I wrote about the discussion last Sunday in About
Syria
, because I found it significant, though it was more of a gut feeling.
Russert made a point of saying Friedman's bags were packed for Israel and Syria,
then Tom continued on talking about Syria's importance. Here's
the clip
I explain in the post “About Syria.” above.

VIEW THE VIDEO

Well, Friedman will now be on “Meet the Press” today, after coming
back from Israel and Syria. I obviously have no idea what will transpire, but
Russert is pushing Friedman hard. An interview airing two Saturdays in a row
on CNBC, which also happened to announce Friedman's trip to Israel and Syria;
now a follow-up interview when Tom returns to be broadcast on “Meet the
Press.” All this Timmy and Tom stuff can't be a coincidence, but I could
be wrong.

Unfortunately, no matter what Tom brings home, or what Condoleezza concocts
can balance this sobering military account from an Israeli, Ze'ev Schiff (h/t
Billmon).


U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is the figure leading the strategy
of changing the situation in Lebanon, not Prime Minister Ehud Olmert or Defense
Minister Amir Peretz. She has so far managed to withstand international pressure
in favor of a cease-fire, even though this will allow Hezbollah to retain
its status as a militia armed by Iran and Syria.

As such, she needs military cards, and unfortunately Israel has not succeeded
to date in providing her with any. Besides bringing Hezbollah and Lebanon
under fire, all of Israel's military cards at this stage are in the form of
two Lebanese villages near the border that have been captured by the IDF.

ANALYSIS: Israel
failing to give U.S. the military cards it needs

Israel has played this terribly because they never had any intention of destroying
Hezbollah, not realistically. The memories of the last time they marched into Lebanon
still burn. However, this disaster, with Bush's horrific fumbling and waiting, will likely
have long term ramifications for us all. An emboldened Hezbollah is the last thing we need right now.

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Taheri Invited to the White House

Wait until you read this one. It is simply incredible.

I've been all over the Iranian badge story, as you undoubtedly know by now. But this latest development defies all rational thinking.

The man who fabricated the whole story was invited to the White House as an “expert” yesterday. You just can't make this stuff up.

I'd heard about the meeting yesterday, which included Wayne Downing, Barry McCaffrey, Michael Vickers and Fouad Ajami, but I wasn't told about Taheri until today.

Two weeks ago, Amir Taheri published an op-ed in Canada's National Post about an Iranian law that forced Jews to wear a yellow stripe. The story, reminiscent of Nazi Germany, quickly provoked outrage, but was just as quickly revealed to be a total fabrication. It also ran in the New York Post.

Apparently this is just the sort of reliable advice that President Bush needs. Yesterday, Taheri had a face-to-face with the President as one of a small group of “experts” on Iraq that visited the White House.

According to Press Secretary Tony Snow, the experts were invited to the White House for their “honest opinions” on Iraq.

TPM Muckraker

Honest to God, I'm speechless.

BUT LET ME ADD… to answer your comments below, not in the least surprised.

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United Nations: Badge Story is Bogus – FINAL

The story continues to develop and not in a good way for Amir Taheri, the neocons, or for the Simon Wiesenthal Center, which was instrumental in giving this story its legs.

I just heard about this and also received a heads up from Greg Sargent on this development.

A letter received today by Wiesenthal Center Dean, Rabbi Marvin Hier, written by Alicia Barnena, Acting Chef de Cabinet, on behalf of the Secretary General, said: “The Secretary-General, who is currently traveling in Asia, was disturbed by this report and asked me to look into this matter immediately. I have now done so, and an analysis of the law by the United Nations Resident Coordinator in Tehran finds that there are no suggestions or clauses within the law that refer to religious minorities and their dress, or that would support the serious concerns raised in the National Post story.”

“We are pleased that the United Nations is now involved in the matter and has confirmed that the current law does not have any dress codes for minorities,” said Rabbi Hier.

U.N. Investigation Finds No Evidence Of Religious Minority Dress Code In Iran

Forgive me if I find Rabbi Hier’s statement a big skimpy, especially considering they were willing to confirm it outright last Friday.

On that note, I’ve learned through an impeccable source that Rabbi Hier and the Simon Wiesenthal Center deny that Aaron Breitbart said any of the things I quoted in my reporting. I’m shocked, aren’t you? Hier even denies that anyone ever told me he worked for four hours to confirm the story in Iran, which is exactly what Breitbart said that also included the emphatic statements that the badge story was “absolutely true,” a “throwback” to the bad old days of Hitler, and it’s “very true” and “very scary.” But as this source also suggested, I shouldn’t waste any time on rebutting these boys. I don’t intend to, believe me. My notes are accurate, the quotes verbatim, all the way down to Breitbart’s, “It’s on Drugde.”

After a request from a reader, I also sent an email to the New York Post’s Andy Soltis yesterday, who was one of the authors of the “Fourth Reich” fantasy article. No response from him yet on whether they’re going to back away from their hyperbole. I encourage everyone who is interested in tamping down the volume on Iran to email Mr. Soltis. They, too, should be held accountable for being so irresponsible. LATE UPDATE: I just got off the phone with someone who confirmed my thoughts, which is that Soltis had NOTHING to do with the headline, which comes from the top. Who is at the top? Rupert Murdoch. I’ll get right on having him clarify that headline (–snark alert–).

Powerline is still trumpeting the story, not to mention carrying Taheri’s water for him. That Taheri’s Iranian badge story broke at the same time Olmert was in Washington simply cannot be a coincidence. What Taheri, John Turley-Ewert and even, I’m sad to say, the Simon Wiesenthal Center didn’t count on is my interest and reporting joining up with renowned reporter Larry Cohler-Esses, who took the story to its fullest, so far, in his article, ‘YELLOW’ JOURNALISM!! – Anatomy of a hoax: False story alleging special yellow insignia for Iranian Jews spurred by Wiesenthal Center’s flawed confirmation, in which I am a source.

Frankly, there’s still more to uncover here, starting with who wanted the Iranian badge story stirred up in the first place? Amir Taheri is part of Benador Associates, a neocon pr firm. I also believe that the Simon Wiesenthal Center isn’t blameless in this story. Follow the posts I’ve done reporting this story. It will become clear, but the bogus badge story is done.

Finally, I want to thank all my readers, especially those who took the time to get the truth out that I have done original reporting on this story from the start. I’m not one of the gigantic blogs, doing this all alone, so people were quick to give larger name URLs credit on a story that I was investigating from the start. Without my readers and my own tenacity to get credit for my work, I would have remained in the background. It’s not about blowing my horn, but the importance of having important reporting by a blogger acknowledged, when traditional journalists could not have cared less. Also, it’s just a fact that even people in the blogosphere aren’t quick to credit you if you’re on a new, smaller blog, which I understand, up to a point. But if anyone had bothered to read what I was doing they could ascertain that I had the goods on this one. My wonderful readers did and you’ll never know how grateful I’ve been for your support, comments and emails.

As way of running down thanks, the first … (UPDATE: I slighted my pal, Skippy, who had the story up early.) … to call me was Larry Cohler-Esses of The Jewish Week. It took a while to get credit for being a source, but he didn’t stop until it was made right. Through my guest blogging for Jane at FDL, I was able to truly blast the story to a wider audience. I’m so grateful to Jane for these chances. Today, I’ve now got links from TPM, Glenn Greenwald, MyDD, Andrew Sullivan @ Time, Moderate Voice, Liberal Oasis, with John at Crooks & Liars giving me a headline fitting of what a mother would write, just today. Thank you to everyone. It means the world to finally get support (on this story) from such an amazing group of big blogs, all of whom, besides Jane, are MEN.

Has Bush’s Iran War Propaganda Begun?

The Iranian Badge Story Disappears… sort of

More on the Debunked Iranian Badge Story

Who Started the Iranian Badge Story?

Iranian Badge Story Follow Up

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Iranian Badge Story Follow Up

Taylor Marsh, who has done some substantial original reporting on this story from her blog, has a detailed and very interesting post today exploring the question of who bears original and ultimate responsibility for the manufacture and distribution of this false story. Be sure to follow the links to Taylor’s other posts where you can see the chronology of her impressive journalistic involvement in this story. – Glenn Greenwald

United Nations: Badge Story is Bogus – FINAL

Regarding the dress code story it seems that my column was used as the basis for a number of reports that somehow jumped the gun. As far as my article is concerned I stand by it. The law has been passed by the Islamic Majlis and will now be submitted to the Council of Guardians. A committee has been appointed to work out the modalities of implementation. … via Who Started the Iranian Badge Story?

“Jumped the gun”?

Aaron Breitbart called me back and I spoke with him today. We’ll get to that in a minute. First I want to address Amir Taheri’s walk back of the other day. But make sure you check out some of the comments to Taheri’s article, which include “I wonder if you can ever trust this big liar” and “This is the biggest lie I ever heard” and on and on.

Evidently, it all gets down to this: what will the Iranians do with the law that was passed in 2004 and why was this so urgent to bring up now? Add to this my question, which remains: Who started the Iranian badge story?

The title of Taheri’s article in the Post is A colour code for Iran’s ‘infidels’. The picture next to it is intentionally inflammatory, which is the same as you are seeing on this post. Secondly, now Taheri is saying he doesn’t know what will happen with the law, while questioning why the Iranians aren’t disavowing his story completely. Evidently, the mere fact that the Iranians are silent is a hint of what will happen. The following is taken directly from Taheri’s article. Notice the interchange of “would be” and “will be.”

The new law, drafted during the presidency of Muhammad Khatami in 2004, had been blocked within the Majlis. That blockage, however, has been removed under pressure from Khatami’s successor, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

(snip)

Religious minorities would have their own colour schemes. They will also have to wear special insignia, known as zonnar, to indicate their non-Islamic faiths. Jews would be marked out with a yellow strip of cloth sewn in front of their clothes while Christians will be assigned the colour red. Zoroastrians end up with Persian blue as the colour of their zonnar. It is not clear what will happen to followers of other religions, including Hindus, Bahais and Buddhists, not to mention plain agnostics and atheists, whose very existence is denied by the Islamic Republic.

via Iranian Badge Story Disappears… sort of

In my opinion, Taheri’s statement regarding his story is just not credible*.

Now to Aaron Breitbart who is the senior researcher for the Simon Wiesenthal Center, specializing in the Holocaust, and the person who first confirmed the story to me last Friday. First, he said he doesn’t know John Turley-Ewart. He’s the guy from the National Post who wrote in the fax I received from Breitbart that “I think we need to draw attention and much of it to this right now.” Those words were delivered to Rabbi Cooper. Breitbart also said he wasn’t aware that Taheri was a member of Benador Associates. Then he didn’t read the fax he sent to me, because at the very end it says plainly in black lettering: “Iranian author and journalist Amir Taheri is a member of Benador Associates.” Also, when I talked to Breitbart last Friday, he knew enough about Taheri to say he was a respected author and journalist, today adding that they’d “called around” to find out that Taheri was “quite a credible source.” Taheri’s association with Benador Associates is a critical part of this yarn and it is my assessment that it is simply not credible that the Center didn’t know his affiliation with Benador.

Breitbart gave quite a lot of weight today to the fact that Iranian “counselor officials” had not denied Taheri’s story. As I said above, Taheri does this as well in the statement he was forced to make after the furor erupted over his article: “Interestingly, the Islamic Republic authorities refuse to issue an official statement categorically rejecting the concept of dhimmitude and the need for marking out religious minorities.”

Breitbart then offered that this story was “floated about” but that as far as proving it, “certainly not.” Going on, he offered that “sources” say there is talk of it happening, but it might have been “floated” (there’s that word again) to “see world reaction” to it. Later in our conversation he said yet again that it was “floated around unofficially,” but that we “cannot
be sure.”

This is not the tone, nor the content of what Mr. Breitbart told me on Friday, when he used words to say the story was “absolutely true,” a “throwback” to the bad old days of Hitler, and that it was “very true” and “very scary.” He went further on Friday to say that Rabbi Hier, the dean and founder to the Simon Wiesenthal Center, had talked to experts in Iran who’ve confirmed his worst fears, ending with the coup de grace: “It’s on Drudge.”

Mr. Breitbart backed away from Friday’s language, now saying there was “envisioning” of the clothing to identify Jews and non-Muslims, and that the story certainly wasn’t “conjured up.” Breitbart shared his own personal feelings on the whole subject, which amounted to the idea being “floated,” but not able to be proven.

I also asked Breitbart if he thought this whole story had anything to do with Israel’s Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s visit to America this week. Oh, no, he said. Quite a coincidence, I replied. Well, sometimes things are just coincidental, he offered. Oh, and the story also had nothing to do with stirring up a drumbeat for war in Iran either.

To close, I asked Mr. Breitbart if he felt the Center had taken a hit on this since they confirmed the story and now it’s been found to be false. “I don’t know,” was his response.

Oh, I almost forgot. Breitbart offered that he didn’t have any idea who Taheri’s source was for the story that caused all this drama. As far as I know, nobody else does either.

LATE UPDATE: Matthew Yglesias, sitting in for Josh Marshall this week, has now linked and given full credit to the work I’ve done on this story, which has not been easy to get. Thanks, Matt. (I’m still waiting for The Jewish Week to do the same.) FINALLY, it’s up and Larry Cohler-Esses kept his word, which he gave to me through multiple conversations we had talking about the story, as he finalized the piece that appears today. ADDITIONALLY… I want to thank Glenn Greenwald, who did a most gracious update on my behalf in his post today.

UPDATE III: Credit for my work on this story has finally appeared, first on Talking Points Memo, as a “late update” though Matthew Yglesias didn’t link to me, which was actually requested by Larry Cohler-Esses.

UPDATE II: Larry Cohler-Esses’ story on this is up on Jewish Week. I am one of the main sources for this piece. I just got off the phone with Larry, who apologized profusely, because my name was left out of this week’s version. He promised that it would be rectified tomorrow, online. Please take the time to read Larry’s piece. It’s the beginning of an unraveling. Stay tuned.

UPDATE I: Canada’s National Post has finally apologized for the badge story they ran. I took a long break this evening, but thought I’d add to the update below by saying that when Larry Cohler-Esses and I talked earlier tonight, he said the Simon Wiesenthal Center denied Aaron Breitbart told me what I reported earlier on this story, beginning last Friday. We had a good chuckle about that one, believe me. It seems everyone is coming clean but the Center and Taheri, which makes you wonder, now doesn’t it?

*NOTE: Thanks to Tom for catching a mistake; noted and corrected.

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Who Started the Iranian Badge Story?

(cross-posted at firedoglake)

UPDATE: Amir Taheri has been pressured to release a statement.

Regarding the dress code story it seems that my column was used as the basis for a number of reports that somehow jumped the gun. As far as my article is concerned I stand by it.

The law has been passed by the Islamic Majlis and will now be submitted to the Council of Guardians. A committee has been appointed to work out the modalities of implementation. …

PRESS RELEASE: AMIR TAHERI ADDRESSES QUERIES ABOUT DRESS CODE STORY

This isn't the first investigative piece I've done, because it's something I've enjoyed for years, having done investigative work into the sex trade in all ways, manners and places. But if you haven't been following this story, welcome to the latest Iranian intrigue misinformation push meant to move us closer to a strike against Iran. That's my assessment so far, with more questions popping up and few answers, the further into it I look. So, let's
unwind it. For regular readers, you've seen some of this, but there's even more that's trasnpired today.

After hearing about the story early last Friday, I spoke with Aaron Breitbart, a senior researcher of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, who was eager to confirm it, using words like “throwback” to the Nazi era, “very true”
and “very scary,” as well as offering that the dean and founder of
the Center, Rabbi Marvin Hier, had been on the phone for “four hours”
confirming the story. As someone said to me today, it makes you wonder what
the Rabbi was doing on the phone for 4 hours. After all, how long does it take to confirm something so incredibly frightening?

Reporting
that the Simon Weisenthal Center confirmed the story made it around the web
and beyond, as did subsequent
posts and follow
ups
. Because when an organization like that confirms something as alarming as the Iranian government passing a law to identify Jews and non-Muslims, it rightly causes four alarm Holocaust revisited hysteria. That was the intention.

After the story was thoroughly debunked,
I put in another call to Breitbart late on Friday, then called back again today. I wanted to get a comment from him about the discrediting of the story and see if I could ascertain why the Simon Wiesenthal Center would unabashedly back such an outrageous falsehood. He still hasn't answered his phone or returned my calls. I was eventually transferred to Avra Shapiro, Director of Public Relations, who said someone would get back to me. They have not.

A conversation earlier today inspired me to look closer at the facsimile, including times and dates. There is not only a cc to Ms. Shapiro, but also a Michele Alkin, the Director of Communications for the Simon Wiesenthal Center. I've forwarded the fax to someone I hope can take it further. We shall see. The names at the top are above the main text, which looks like it has been cut off and was originally sent to the Rabbi Marvin Hier. This is what appears next.

Subject: Taheri on Iran

Rabbi Cooper,

As per our conversation, I'm looking at running this but I have not been able to confirm its veracity. Particularly, I want to make sure that the part saying Jews will have to wear a yellow stripe and Christians a red stripe
is in fact true. Now the law has not yet come into effect, but it
is moving closer to becoming law and I think we need to draw attention
and much of it to this right now.

Any assistance you can give us in confirming this info would be much appreciated.

Best,

jte

The initials refer to John Turley-Ewert of the National Post, which used to
be owned by Conrad Black, but is now controlled by two brothers of the Asper
family that I've been told are actively involved with Israel's Likud party.
The National Post has an editorial policy similar to Brit Hume's at Fox “News.”
They are interchangeable and far leaning to the right. But the above section
I emphasized seems to show that not only is Turley-Ewert asking for confirmation
of the Iranian badge story, but a sort of collaboration on promoting the story.
Someone I spoke to today confirmed that was indeed their assessment, too.

But who got the Simon Wiesenthal Center to stick their necks out on this bogus
Iranian badge story, risking their very reputation and funding credibility,
and who had what to gain by doing so?

Could this story have something to do with Douglas Feith's Office
of Strategic Influence
PSYOPS plan to plant false stories in foreign press?
Sure, that was supposed to be shut down, but was it? After all, Canada is foreign
press and once a story gets printed it's all stops out for spreading the propaganda.


''Our inability to seize the initiative in the 'War of Ideas' with Al Qaeda
is perhaps our most significant shortcoming so far in the war against terrorism,''
said the document, dated Sept. 17, 2003. ''We do not fully understand Al Qaeda
and its relationship to supportive communities in the Islamic world, and so
are not yet able to develop an effective strategy for countering its propaganda
in those communities, let alone for winning the information campaign in the
war against terrorism.''

The document said one goal was to establish a ''road map for creating an
effective D.O.D. capability to design and conduct effective strategic influence
and operational and tactical perception-management campaigns.''

Pentagon
and Bogus News: All Is Denied
(Times Select, dated 12.5.03)

In the aftermath of the Iraq war, it's important to find out the facts regarding the obvious drumbeat for a strike against Iran. Asking important questions is a good place to start.

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